Georgia O’Keeffe Before She Was Famous She’s known for her paintings of skulls, flowers, and deserts. A new MOMA show suggests that her early work was stronger. April 26, 2023 Senga Nengudi’s Journeys Through Air, Water, and Sand In a show at Dia Beacon, the artist explores her poetics of the body and her philosophical belief in flow. March 13, 2023 The Ultimate Vermeer Collection A bravura show at the Rijksmuseum displays more of the Dutch Master’s work at once than he himself ever saw. February 20, 2023 John Ahearn and Rigoberto Torres’s Portraits of the South Bronx “Swagger and Tenderness,” at the Bronx Museum, brings back the beauty of a struggling community. December 26, 2022 Two Views of New York, from Edward Hopper and a Historic Black Gallery Museum shows capture the great realist painter’s vision of the city and, at Just Above Midtown, the work of artists of color from the seventies and eighties. October 24, 2022 The Polymorphous Genius of Wolfgang Tillmans The German photographer, the subject of an immense, flabbergasting retrospective at MOMA, has redefined the terms of art photography. October 3, 2022 When New York Ruled the World A spectacular show of art and documentation at the Jewish Museum captures New York in 1962-64, an era of near-weekly advances in all of the arts. August 1, 2022 Fault Lines in America and Ukraine A clamorous retrospective of the painter Robert Colescott, and “Women at War,” a show of contemporary Ukrainian artists, unsettle and inspire. July 18, 2022 A Frequently Misunderstood American Master The Yanktonai Dakota painter Oscar Howe, who died in 1983, is the subject of a remarkable retrospective at the National Museum of the American Indian. July 4, 2022 The Importance of Scale Shows of twentieth-century American modernists, at the Whitney, and the contemporary artist Walter Price, at Greene Naftali, test an idea of what makes paintings work. June 6, 2022